Sidekick Boxing

Chinese Striker Hu Yong Hunts Historic Knockout Against Iron-Chinned Danny Kingad

Hu Yong has studied every second of Danny Kingad’s nine-year ONE Championship career, analyzing each punch absorbed and every strike that failed to drop the Filipino veteran. The Chinese knockout artist believes he’s found the pattern nobody else discovered — a critical weakness hiding behind extensive experience that’s kept Kingad competitive but never delivered signature finishes.

The 29-year-old Beijing native returns desperate to snap a brutal two-fight skid when he meets Kingad in a flyweight MMA clash at ONE Fight Night 40: Buntan vs. Hemetsberger II on Prime Video on Friday, February 13, live from Lumpinee Stadium in Bangkok. Both fighters arrive nursing recent wounds — Hu carrying consecutive defeats while his opponent drags three losses in his last four outings into the ring.

“My opponent’s advantage is his extensive experience and well-rounded skills, but at the same time, he lacks a signature finishing move,” Hu explained.

That confidence stems from years refining explosive power through Sanda training, the ancient Chinese martial art built around devastating striking. Hu’s 8-3 promotional record shows eight victories by stoppage, proof his threats carry weight. The Fighting Bros Club representative sees advantages nobody else brought against Kingad, a fighter who’s absorbed punishment from legends like Adriano Moraes, Yuya Wakamatsu, and Demetrious Johnson without ever being stopped by strikes.

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Kingad has proven impossible to finish throughout his promotional history, his durability allowing him to survive against championship-caliber competition. Nobody has ever knocked out the 30-year-old Filipino despite nearly a decade facing the division’s hardest hitters. That reality only intensifies Hu’s obsession.

“He has never been knocked out before, and I want to accomplish that challenge,” Hu said.

The stakes extend beyond this single night. Hu has already mapped the road ahead if his fists produce the result he envisions — revenge against reigning ONE Flyweight MMA World Champion Yuya Wakamatsu, the man who first handed him defeat in ONE Championship.

“A few years ago, I lost to Yuya Wakamatsu, and I am eager for revenge,” Hu revealed. “I will first secure this win and then strive for that opportunity.”

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